The Kennedy Curse: Why Tragedy Has Haunted America's First Family for 150 Years
Author:
Genre: Biographies & Memoirs
Book Type: Hardcover
Author:
Genre: Biographies & Memoirs
Book Type: Hardcover
Vicki M. (vmachapy) reviewed on + 215 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
Back cover reads:
This book is a detective story.
It is an investigation of one of the great mysteries of our time-the Kennedy Curse. It explores the underlying pattern that governs the curse and examines the many influences-historical, psychological, and genetic-that have shaped the Kennedy's character and led their self-defeating behavior.
The stories in this book illustrate how the Kennedy Curse began in the common Irish immigrant experience of poverty and humiliation,and developed into an obessive lust for power and dominance over others at the expense of all ethical behavior....
The people in this book were, for the most part, on a fatal collision course with reality. They felt immune to mortal laws and somehow divinely protected from the inevitable consequences of their deeds and misdeeds. In their hunger for unlimited power, they saw themselves as superior beings who resided above the common herd. They felt special-omnipotent and worthy of being worshiped...
Our inclination to idolize the Kennedy's has obscured their human attributes. And so, finally, this book is an attempt to demystify the Kennedy's by telling the story of how the descendents of Patrick Kennedy, a poor Irish immigrant who came to the shores of the New World in 1849, pulled, tore, scratched, scraped, clutched, and clawed their way to the top of the American society-and, in the porcess, made the fatal mistake of thinking of themselves as divine. - From the Kennedy Curse
This book is a detective story.
It is an investigation of one of the great mysteries of our time-the Kennedy Curse. It explores the underlying pattern that governs the curse and examines the many influences-historical, psychological, and genetic-that have shaped the Kennedy's character and led their self-defeating behavior.
The stories in this book illustrate how the Kennedy Curse began in the common Irish immigrant experience of poverty and humiliation,and developed into an obessive lust for power and dominance over others at the expense of all ethical behavior....
The people in this book were, for the most part, on a fatal collision course with reality. They felt immune to mortal laws and somehow divinely protected from the inevitable consequences of their deeds and misdeeds. In their hunger for unlimited power, they saw themselves as superior beings who resided above the common herd. They felt special-omnipotent and worthy of being worshiped...
Our inclination to idolize the Kennedy's has obscured their human attributes. And so, finally, this book is an attempt to demystify the Kennedy's by telling the story of how the descendents of Patrick Kennedy, a poor Irish immigrant who came to the shores of the New World in 1849, pulled, tore, scratched, scraped, clutched, and clawed their way to the top of the American society-and, in the porcess, made the fatal mistake of thinking of themselves as divine. - From the Kennedy Curse
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